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"Maggie
Remington: The Evolution of Landscape Painting" by Caole Lowry
Remington
has been compelled to produce this wonderful work travelling
throughout the American West and old Mexico. Her palette is the earth’s
sometimes
subtle,
sometimes vibrant pigments; her easel is the ground on which she walks,
each canvas completed and carefully dated, given the geographical name
of the place she stopped to get to know. Her methods are logical
madness,
ambitious and sweaty, the results of hiking and digging, mixing and
hauling
mud and sand, crushed rock applied by hand, twig or weed. The results
are
beautiful—large canvases like tanned hides, with organic, biomorphic
earth
patterns, earth-stained and recorded by this artist-lover of the
landscape,
making her tribute to the ground we all stand upon. For Maggie it is a
sacred act, this art-making. For us it is a visual experience that
connects
us to each other and to our geological present and past—it is sensual
and
most of all, real. Come see this remarkable work by a remarkable
artist.
![]() It is interesting to note that Maggie is a distant cousin to Frederick Remington and her paternal Grandmother had Remington as her middle name and she married Harold Remington---all from upper New York--Watertown. Maggie’s friend the writer, Silver Stanfill expresses the profundity of this art on the artists website at www.maggieremington.com: "Remington’s earth paintings celebrate patterns of nature: river beds or mountain ranges seen from ten miles up, a canyon’s geology, anatomy of a trout jaw, an amoeba extending a pseudopod, DNA structure. But rather than aiming for recognition, Remington’s work provokes reflection. Instead of showing what any sojourner could see, her paintings invite viewers to experience a response to a place. Think of Rothko (spiritual majesty) meets O’Keefe (commitment to locality)."
Maggie
Remington has exhibited her Earth Paintings at the Bioneers Conference
in San Rafael, CA October of 2003. Paul Hawken, author of "Natural
Capitalism
" wrote "No conference on Earth celebrates more fully the possibilities
of creating a world that is conducive to life. Bioneers is central to
the
re-imagination of what it means to be human." For more
about Maggie, visit her website: www.maggieremington.com
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